Industrial IoT sits at the intersection of manufacturing, data analytics, and financial services in a way that most fintech companies never encounter. Relayr was founded in Berlin in 2013 to build IoT middleware — the software layer that connects industrial machines to data platforms — but evolved toward a financial services model that is genuinely unusual: outcome-based financing for industrial equipment. Rather than selling IoT software or hardware outright, Relayr structures deals where manufacturers pay based on machine uptime and performance rather than purchasing equipment capital. That model — closer to equipment-as-a-service than traditional finance — requires IoT data as the foundation of the financial structure. Relayr was acquired by Munich Re, the German reinsurance giant, in 2018, reflecting the insurance group's interest in using IoT data to price and manage industrial risk. In the European fintech landscape, Relayr is an outlier — a company that sits at the boundary between industrial technology and financial services, using sensor data to underwrite equipment performance in a way that has no real precedent in traditional finance. It represents the direction that embedded finance takes when the embedded context is a factory floor rather than a consumer checkout.